Governor Jerry Brown’s office released his Christmas Eve roster of pardons (pdf) Wednesday for 105 convicted felons who have been clean for 10 years, then revoked the pardon for one who belatedly turned up on Santa’s naughty list.

Shortly after the governor’s list was released Wednesday, the Los Angeles Times alerted Brown’s office that Glen Williams Carnes, who served three years probation for possession of a controlled substance for sale in the late 1990s, had not “exhibited good moral character, and conducted himself as a law-abiding-citizen,” as his pardon stated.

Carnes was disciplined by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, the private-sector regulator of all securities firms doing business in the United States, in May 2013, according to the Times. He didn’t admit guilt, but signed a consent form agreeing to be barred from working with financial investment advisors over allegations he misled investigators looking at his business dealings.

The governor’s office does a lot of pardons compared to his immediate predecessors. Brown is up to 509 since he took office. Arnold Schwarzenegger, Gray Davis and Pete Wilson issued a total of 29 in two decades. Before them, George Deukmejian pardoned 325 and Reagan 574. Brown issued 404 during his first tenure.

The vetting process is not transparent but is thought to usually include the Board of Parole Hearings. In this case, it did not. The Times reported that Brown spokesman Evan Westrup said the governor relied solely on the certificate of rehabilitation issued to Carnes by the Orange County Superior Court in 2013.

Carnes was one of the 65 people on the list convicted of drug-related crimes. That’s 61.9% of the total, which dropped to 61.5% when the government withdrew his pardon.

Forty-three of the offenses were for possession of enough drugs to merit a mention of sales. Twelve of the pardoned were convicted of drug transportation for sale, five for drug cultivation and five for drug manufacture. Burglary was the largest category of nondrug-related pardons. There were 10, followed by grand theft (6), robbery (5) and assault with a weapon (5).

The pardon reports released by the governor’s office do not offer very many crime details, so it isn’t readily apparent from the category what the transgression actually was. But many of these people being pardoned were busted when the War on Drugs was filling California prisons beyond the capacity for humane incarceration.

Mandatory minimum sentences and harsh penalties were imposed for possession, transportation and sale of drugs. The state put nonviolent offenders behind bars or ruined their lives with stigmatizing records that couldn’t be hidden from employers, business associates or the government. Many of the convicted received probation.

Only under intense pressure from the federal courts to reduce prison overcrowding has the state reluctantly reduced the penalties for some drug and nonviolent crimes. The long war has given Governor Brown ample opportunity to play Santa Claus at Christmas.